The project has so far raised $26.5 million, but needs to sell another $55 million in total to avoid triggering a redemption of all the bonds, Ken Ham, the nonprofit’s president, said in an e-mail to supporters yesterday. Without the proceeds, construction funding will fall short, he said.

The 510-foot “Ark” is intended to be the centerpiece of a planned biblical theme park called Ark Encounter. But the deal has come in for criticism, with some saying its religious theme may violate the Constitution.

Religious objections aside, the deal highlights the risk of Industrial-development bonds, which are considered the riskiest municipal debt because they account for the largest proportion of defaults in the $3.7 trillion municipal market.

The first phase of construction is due to start in March, but time is fast running out and the signs aren’t good. Ark Encounter has so far failed to entice any institutional investors, a sure sign of the validity of the project.

Unless the hole in funds can be filled by private bond buyers before the February 6th deadline, the whole project will have to be abandoned. It seems only a miracle can save them now. Still, stranger things have happened!

Forbes: – How could a Puerto Rico default hammer the $3.7 trillion U.S. muni-bond market in 2014?– As we head into 2014, you may be asking why we are concerned about a small island located in the Caribbean Sea, about a thousand miles southeast of Miami. Geographically, it is a mere speck on the map… practically irrelevant. In fact, 70 islands the size of Puerto Rico could fit comfortably into the state of Texas. However, the debt burden currently burying this economy may eventually send nasty tremors into the United States’ municipal bond market.

Reuters: – Puerto Rico aims to sell bonds in near term.– Facing the prospect of losing its investment grade credit rating if it can’t tap capital markets, Puerto Rico plans to issue long-term debt in coming weeks, a spokeswoman for the commonwealth’s Government Development Bank said on Thursday.

BusinessWeek: – Water bonds shrivel as California sees driest year.– The driest year on record for Los Angeles and San Francisco is threatening water supplies to the world’s most productive agricultural region and almost doubling borrowing costs on some bonds issued by California water agencies.

Morningstar: – Year in review: Municipal CEFs.– Normally regarded as a sleepy–and “safe”–asset class, municipal bonds were hammered in 2013. In fact, munis were hit twofold: first by rising interest rates, and then by credit concerns. After a spectacular run in 2012, many muni investors were likely disappointed.

FT: – BlackRock steps into Detroit bonds fight. – BlackRock, the world’s biggest fund manager by assets, is preparing to step in to the fight over the financial future of Detroit, where the treatment of bondholders could set a precedent for struggling towns and cities across the U.S.

ETF Trends: – A battered municipal bond market enters 2014. – Since the S&P Municipal Bond Index was launched in 2000 it never has had two years in a row of negative returns. However, a new year begins with all the uncertainty and expectations of any other year. Municipal bond funds are entering 2014 following a long string of monthly cash outflows indicating that retail investors remain skeptical of the short term prospects of the muni market.

MoneyNews: – Consider emerging market, muni bonds.– With U.S. stocks having soared last year while bonds declined, many investors will want to rebalance their portfolios to maintain their desired stock and bond allocations.

Education

LearnBonds: – Bonds and younger investors (Are bonds for kids?)– There is some debate within the investment community about whether bonds are a wise investment for children and young adults. Investment is an incredibly personal decision and is dependent on the unique situation of the investor. The choice of whether bonds are the correct type of investment for an individual needs to be based on the personal and financial situation of the investor, as well as the investor’s intended use for the money down the line.

Jay on the Markets: – Bonds are to fear early in the year.– The treasury bond market has showed a strong seasonal tendency to perform poorly during the early part of the year. People often ask me “why” this would be so. In fact I get that question often enough to make me wish I had a good answer. Alas, as a proud graduate of “The School of Whatever Works”, I can only repeat our school motto, which is “Whatever!”

High Yield

Forbes: – High yield bond funds see cash outflow in first reading of 2014.– Retail cash outflows from high-yield funds totaled $643 million for the week ended Jan. 1, according to Lipper, a division of Thomson Reuters . The negative start to the new year saw a fairly even split, with outflows from mutual funds at 45% of the sum, and exchange-traded funds at 55%.

Emerging Markets

Brad Zigler: – Emerging market debt’s wild ride.– It’s fair to ask why emerging markets would have been hit so hard by a prospective end to the Federal Reserve’s bond buying program. The answer is fairly simple. Much of the money that the Fed program pushed into the U.S. economy ended up looking for yield overseas. American investors became the world’s biggest investors in foreign debt as this hot money flooded into high yield markets such as Turkey, Brazil, Mexico and Indonesia.

Bond Funds

Bloomberg: – Gross’s mistake on Fed taper echoes across Pimco funds.– Bill Gross, the money manager known as “The Bond King,” misjudged the timing and impact of the Federal Reserve’s plan to scale back its asset purchases in 2013, spurring the Pimco Total Return Fund (PTTRX) biggest decline in almost two decades.

NewsObserver: – Bond market’s changes are going unnoticed. – While the remarkable gains of the stock market in 2013 garnered deserved attention at the end of the year, something else was happening in the much larger bond market.

InvestmentNews: – Bond funds post record withdrawals in 2013. – Bond mutual funds in the U.S. posted record investor withdrawals of $80 billion in 2013 as investors fled fixed income in anticipation that interest rates will rise further.

WSJ: – Year rewarded bond funds that took risks.– Bond funds that purchased stocks, distressed debt and high-yield securities generally outperformed those that bought corporate, U.S. Treasury and mortgage bonds in 2013, underscoring the perception that fixed-income markets are increasingly volatile and potentially perilous places for investors.

IndexUniverse: – 7 most popular short-term bond ETFs in 2013. – U.S. fixed-income ETFs attracted a modest $9.58 billion in fresh net assets in 2013—or roughly a fifth of the inflows the asset class saw a year earlier in 2012—but that’s not to say that demand for fixed-income exposure was muted across the board.

Kiplinger: – The five best load funds for 2014. – There used to be a simple distinction between mutual funds based on the way they were marketed. No-load funds, which don’t charge commissions, were marketed to do-it-yourself investors. Brokers and advisers, by contrast, sold load funds, which charged commissions. The proceeds from those fees were used to compensate the intermediary.